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RE: 401k Portfolio - hendi_alex - 11-11-2013 Tax treaty with U.S. keeps tax issues at a minimum. If held in an IRA, no problems at all. If held in a regular account, you will likely have to submit a form to your brokerage to get the 15% treaty tax rate, otherwise 25% gets skimmed. The form is no big deal, just one page for my TDA account. RE: 401k Portfolio - EricL - 11-11-2013 (11-11-2013, 12:20 PM)hendi_alex Wrote: Tax treaty with U.S. keeps tax issues at a minimum. If held in an IRA, no problems at all. If held in a regular account, you will likely have to submit a form to your brokerage to get the 15% treaty tax rate, otherwise 25% gets skimmed. The form is no big deal, just one page for my TDA account. Thanks Alex. RE: 401k Portfolio - hendi_alex - 11-11-2013 Thanks to you! I had forgotten about adding POT to my regular account and had not yet submitted the form. I faxed them a copy just now. RE: 401k Portfolio - EricL - 11-15-2013 Well, I made my move this morning. Sold my MMM and VVC and purchased TAL and POT. A little disappointed to find out that Schwab doesn't allow auto-reinvestment of dividends on POT because it is a foreign stock. Also a little torn on selling MMM because I think it is a great company but with only a 2% yield and fairly pedestrian earnings and dividend growth rates I thought I could do better. Came down to selling MMM at a slight overvaluation to buying POT at what looks like an undervaluation and much higher yield. Forgot to mention I also made a purchase with new money, buying 12 shares of DLR at $47.75. RE: 401k Portfolio - EricL - 12-17-2013 (11-15-2013, 12:55 PM)EricL Wrote: Well, I made my move this morning. Already regretting my MMM sale. They announced a huge stock buyback and boosted the dividend by 35% today. So much for the recent history of pedestrian increases. Sometimes I think I'd just be better off buying positions and then never selling them and just keep buying stocks I like when I find them rather than trading. Seems like half the time I end up regretting it down the road. RE: 401k Portfolio - TomK - 12-18-2013 (12-17-2013, 11:12 PM)EricL Wrote: Sometimes I think I'd just be better off buying positions and then never selling them and just keep buying stocks I like when I find them rather than trading. Seems like half the time I end up regretting it down the road. It is a tough game -- don't beat yourself up over it. Seems like folks are evenly split between buy and hold (mostly) forever and selling when fully or over-valued. For me, the buy decision is hard enough. I might consider selling if something got obviously wildly overvalued, but for now, I'm sticking with buying, holding, and collecting those dividends. RE: 401k Portfolio - rnsmth - 12-18-2013 (12-18-2013, 03:10 PM)TomK Wrote:Me too. I have some POT bought before the cartel collapsed. It is my smallest position and I am keeping it and reinvesting dividends.(12-17-2013, 11:12 PM)EricL Wrote: Sometimes I think I'd just be better off buying positions and then never selling them and just keep buying stocks I like when I find them rather than trading. Seems like half the time I end up regretting it down the road. RE: 401k Portfolio - EricL - 01-04-2014 Doubled my IBM position on Thursday with new money I had available in the account. Love the long term prospects of the company and feel the stock is at an attractive price here. RE: 401k Portfolio - TomK - 01-05-2014 (01-04-2014, 11:45 PM)EricL Wrote: Doubled my IBM position on Thursday with new money I had available in the account. I've been trying to understand IBM better for a while now. Can you expand on why you love its long-term prospects? It has essentially turned itself into an IT, software, and consulting business, right? So where is the moat and margin in that? Except possibly for scale, I just don't understand what IBM's market advantage is anymore. And I've heard several people say that EPS growth is largely due to the buyback and not revenue growth. So, I would love to hear the bull case for IBM from someone who has looked into it more. Thanks! RE: 401k Portfolio - EricL - 01-06-2014 I feel IBM is a core holding in my portfolio and based on its track record over the last twenty years it looks like a bargain to me at current levels. Revenue growth has slowed recently but between stock buybacks and growing higher margin parts of the business the earnings are projected to grow 10% per year over the next 5 years. With a current PE of just 11, I think its a great value. Here are the historical growth rates over a few periods (numbers from fastgraphs). 20YR EPS = 20.2% 20YR DG = 9.0% 15YR EPS = 11.2% 15YR DG = 15.7% 10YR EPS = 13.9% 10YR DG = 19.2% 5YR EPS = 15.1% 5YR DG = 17.2% With earnings expected to grow at 10% going forward and dividends likely to as well, I think the stock will do fine over the long run. RE: 401k Portfolio - ronn38 - 01-06-2014 I agree with the above assessment of IBM as a business, and am long in the company. But on a more speculative note, I believe when they get Watson sorted out- it will be the beginning of 21st century computing. And I think their power8 chip could give Intel's Xeon processors a run for their money. Ronn RE: 401k Portfolio - EricL - 01-15-2014 My 2013 recap has been posted on Seeking Alpha. http://seekingalpha.com/article/1946771-401k-reconstructed-2013-recap |